Michael Del Priore (1954–May 26, 2020, born in Columbia, SC) was an American master portrait artist with an international reputation, known for oil and pastel portraits in the Classical Realism style.
Notability
Del Priore was recognized as "one of America's top portrait artists".[1] A master of the alla prima approach made famous by John Singer Sargent, he achieved many singular accomplishments, among them, painting nationally known subjects in the public sector.
Del Priore lived in Fork Shoals, in upstate South Carolina,[2] however, he garnered international acclaim in his 40+ year career by doing over 850 oil portraits that included Members of Congress, Supreme Court Justices, Governors, clergy, educators, physicians, cultural, corporate, and community leaders.[3] 24 of his works are listed in the National Portrait Gallery Catalog of American Portraits.
Thirteen of his official portraits are in the art collection of the U. S. House of Representatives,[4] the largest number by a single artist in U. S. history.[5]
Del Priore's artistic talents were evident in his childhood. After graduating from Columbia High School in 1972, he got a job locally as an advertising artist with J.B. White's department store, producing art for The State newspaper, and did freelance art for local businesses. During this time, he befriended established portrait artist Gian Cassone after observing him painting exceptional portraits in a booth at Richland Mall.[9] Cassone, who had studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence, Italy, saw Del Priore's raw talent but noted his lack of experience and told him to, "Go home and draw a thousand heads, then I'll teach you what you need to know." Del Priore completed the huge task, returning in just six weeks. Cassone never expected to see him again, but made good on his promise, introducing Del Priore to master techniques of portrait painting in oil and pastel. Under Cassone's tutelage, he completed hundreds of portraits during a 5-year stint at the mall location. In 1979, Del Priore was commissioned to paint his first nationally known, publicly elected official when Congressman William Jennings Bryan Dorn commissioned him to do his portrait for permanent display in the lobby of the new Dorn VA Hospital in Columbia, named in his honor.[10][11]
In 1980, on Cassone's recommendation, Del Priore moved to Charleston to study oil painting at the Goodbred Gibbes Museum of Art under the late Ray Goodbred, who had studied at the Art Students League under Ogden Pleissner and Robert Brackman, maintained dual residences in New York and Charleston at the time. Goodbred taught him master skills including palette organization, anatomy basics and manipulation of brushes by painting from live models and doing still life studies.
After returning to Columbia in 1984, Del Priore entered a competition announced in The State newspaper for artists to do an official oil portrait of former governor, U. S. Senator Strom Thurmond for the Senate Chamber of the South Carolina Statehouse, honoring his 50th year of public service. Over 200 artists responded. The selection narrowed to two, Del Priore and famed portraitist, Robert Bruce Williams of Washington, DC. "In this case, being a South Carolinian worked to my advantage," said Del Priore. "Because Senator Thurmond was famous for supporting constituents from his home state, he chose me. Afterward, the positive response I received from the public helped me move from the mall to a studio, as I no longer had to search for commissions. It was a great blessing and a major milestone in my career."[1]
Carroll A. Campbell, 112th Governor of South Carolina
George R. Johnson, Jr., Dean Emeritus, Elon University School of Law
Sidney Heyward
Virginia James
Maestro Edvard Tchivzhel
Anthony Del Priore
SSGT Melvin Morris, Medal of Honor Recipient
Justice Paul D. Borman
Mrs. Wilson and Elizabeth
Congressman Pat Roberts
Honors
Del Priore was past chairman and served on the board of directors of the American Society of Portrait Artists (now known as the Portrait Society of America).[12] He was a member of the Artists Fellowship Society of New York and is listed in the Who's Who of American Artists. He served as executive director of the Palmetto Area Cultural Arts Center in Williamston, SC.[13]
In 2018, South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster presented him the Order of the Palmetto,[14] the highest honor given by the governor in recognition of his lifetime achievements in the arts.